Hello,
The thing is that French people don’t pronounce the “H” in the first name Heidi. ( same thing in all our words beginning with an H. ) So it is the same pronunciation as your ID. But Dedene is right, French people add an “h” where it isn’t and don’t say it when there is one in English words !

http://france-bienvenue.fr/ Anne

Hello,
The thing is that French people don’t pronounce the “H” in the first name Heidi. ( same thing in all our words beginning with an H. ) So it is the same pronunciation as your ID. But Dedene is right, French people add an “h” where it isn’t and don’t say it when there is one in English words !

http://france-bienvenue.fr Anne

Hello,
The thing is that French people don’t pronounce the “H” in the first name Heidi. ( same thing in all our words beginning with an H. ) So it is the same pronunciation as your ID. But Dedene is right, French people add an “h” where it isn’t and don’t say it when there is one in English words !

http://www.savagereflections.blogspot.com/ Berowne

Anne: The thing is that French people don’t pronounce the “H” in the first name Heidi. ( same thing in all our words beginning with an H. )

Yes, I had a French girl friend years ago. Eager to learn English, she spent quite a bit of time pronouncing the word “hedgehog” over and over. She would say “HHedge” with a loud, over-emphatic “h,” then follow this with an equally explosive “HHog. I would congratulate her on her h sound.
She explained: “C’est pas difficile, mais on l’oublie.”
She was so caught up in this that once when I introduced her to some American friends of mine she said — honest — “Hedgehog!” to show she could do it.
.-= Berowne´s last blog ..MUSIC HATH CHARMS? NOT ALWAYS =-.

http://www.savagereflections.blogspot.com Berowne

Anne: The thing is that French people don’t pronounce the “H” in the first name Heidi. ( same thing in all our words beginning with an H. )

Yes, I had a French girl friend years ago. Eager to learn English, she spent quite a bit of time pronouncing the word “hedgehog” over and over. She would say “HHedge” with a loud, over-emphatic “h,” then follow this with an equally explosive “HHog. I would congratulate her on her h sound.
She explained: “C’est pas difficile, mais on l’oublie.”
She was so caught up in this that once when I introduced her to some American friends of mine she said — honest — “Hedgehog!” to show she could do it.
.-= Berowne´s last blog ..MUSIC HATH CHARMS? NOT ALWAYS =-.

http://www.correresmidestino.com/ Zhu

The cashback things puzzled me for a long time because it doesn’t exist in France. It looks weird at first: go to a store, buy some stuff and instead of paying for the items, the cashier gives you back money!

The cashback things puzzled me for a long time because it doesn’t exist in France. It looks weird at first: go to a store, buy some stuff and instead of paying for the items, the cashier gives you back money!

The cashback things puzzled me for a long time because it doesn’t exist in France. It looks weird at first: go to a store, buy some stuff and instead of paying for the items, the cashier gives you back money!

Where Jennie talks about learning and teaching languages, traveling the world, and being an immigrant/expat.

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